
Robert Wallace Flint- Ph.D.
- College of Saint Rose
Robert Wallace Flint
- Ph.D.
- College of Saint Rose
About
23
Publications
1,260
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Introduction
Skills and Expertise
Current institution
Additional affiliations
August 1999 - present
August 1997 - May 1999
May 1990 - August 1990
Education
September 1992 - July 1997
August 1988 - May 1992
Publications
Publications (23)
There is a long-standing debate as to whether the memory process of consolidation is neurochemically similar to or the same as the set of processes involved in retrieval and reconsolidation of that memory. In addition, although we have previously shown that initial memory processing in the hippocampus causes a drainage of hippocampal glucose becaus...
Glucose, a well-known memory modulator and physiological component of acute arousal, was examined for its influence on the false memory effect in two experiments. A baseline blood glucose (BG) measure was followed by the consumption of d-glucose or saccharin and a 15-minute post-consumption BG test in Experiment 1. Participants were then asked to l...
The effect of cycloheximide (CXM), a protein synthesis inhibitor, on memory reconsolidation and extinction was explored in rats using a model of post-traumatic stress. Forty-two animals were exposed to predator stress followed by 1, 2, or 4 extinction trials. Saline or CXM (1 mg/kg) was administered following the last extinction trial and anxiety w...
Social neuroscience is a relatively new multidisciplinary field which merges the more reductionistic approaches of neuroscience with the more molar perspectives of social psychology. In this article we report the joint efforts of the authors to develop an effective team-taught course in social neuroscience at the undergraduate level. We review our...
The early postnatal period represents a time of significant neural development. Neonatal exposure to stressors, environmental toxins, and many different pharmacological agents may have a significant impact on subsequent behavior and cognition in adulthood. The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of early administration of the protein s...
Reconsolidation of long-term memory has become a topic of great interest in recent years, and has the potential to provide important information regarding memory processes and the treatment of memory-related disorders. The present study examined the role of systemic protein synthesis inhibition in reconsolidation of a long-term spatial memory react...
Undergraduate neuroscience laboratory activities frequently focus on exercises that build student's wet/dry laboratory skills, foster critical thinking, and provide opportunities for hands-on experiences. Such activities are, without a doubt, extremely important, but sometimes fall short of modeling actual research and often lack the 'unknown' hypo...
Rats were used to examine the impact of systemic protein synthesis inhibition (PSI) on the reconsolidation of a contextually reactivated memory of conditioned taste aversion (CTA). Rats were administered intraperitoneal injections of saline or lithium chloride (LiCl; .15 M) following exposure to a novel sucrose solution in a unique context. Seven d...
Developmental research on memory is commonly conducted using preweanling rats, but the extent to which these animals are susceptible to hormone-induced memory retrieval is unclear. This study examined the effects of epinephrine (.001, .01, or .1 mg/kg) on retrieval of IA conditioning in 17-day-old infants. Animals tested 24 hr following training pe...
Previous research has shown that developmentally related memory impairments in immature rodents are malleable and may be attenuated using a variety of pharmacological and behavioral treatments. This experiment examined the effects of glucose (10, 100, 250 or 500 mg/kg) or saline on blood glucose level, locomotor activity, and spontaneous alternatio...
The relationships between emotional arousal and cognition in humans represent an important field in cognitive neuroscience. Studies examining the characteristics of emotion-induced memory enhancement and the mechanisms through which these effects occur are becoming increasingly common. This article describes three affordable laboratory exercises of...
Glucose improves memory on a variety of tasks has been well established in both the animal and human literature. Of particular relevance to the present experiment is the finding that administration of glucose improves face recognition performance in both healthy, young adults and in Alzheimer's patients. This experiment attempted to expand on these...
Increases in plasma blood glucose levels modulate memory, mood, and, to some extent, attention in adults. Participants in the present study were administered glucose (10, 100, and 500 mg/kg, or 50 g) or placebo (23.7 mg saccharin) shortly prior to completing the test of variables of attention (TOVA), a continuous performance test (CPT) commonly use...
The immunostimulant lipopolysaccharide (LPS) produces numerous physiological and behavioral effects in adult rodents. The present study examined the effects of this endotoxin on activity levels and weight gain in 20-day-old preweanling rats. Experiment 1 demonstrated that 400 ~g/kg of LPS produced a significant decline in locomotor activity 1 hr po...
Two experiments using a state-dependent retention (SDR) design determined whether MK-801 blocked the acquisition and retention of an avoidance response. In Experiments 1 and 2, rats were trained and tested 30 min after injections of either saline or MK-801 (0.05 and 0.10 mg/kg, respectively). Two minutes after training, subjects were immediately te...
Research examining the memory-enhancing effects of glucose in humans has been limited to mnemonic tasks lacking affective components, even though glucose may be a mechanism for emotion-induced memory enhancement. This limitation does not permit analysis of interactions between the enhancing properties of emotional stimuli and glucose. Participants...
The study of memory modulation in infant rats has typically focused on reminder/retrieval treatments involving reexposure to components of the internal or external training context. Rarely have studies employed pharmacological treatments to investigate the neurochemical substrates of memory storage in preweanling rats. The present study investigate...
The present experiment examined whether forgetting of contextual attributes—the loss of discriminability of background stimulus
features over time—also occurs when a memory remains inaccessible (amnestic) during the retention interval. To examine this
issue, rats received an acute hypothermia treatment that caused reversible anterograde amnesia for...
Infantile amnesia in rats may be attenuated by a wide variety of retrieval cues which reactivate memory for the training episode. The present study investigated the effects of glucose on memory retrieval in infant rats. In Experiment 1, 17-day-old preweanling rats were trained to criterion on passive avoidance conditioning. Twenty-four hours later,...
Rhesus monkeys were trained on 2 versions of delayed nonmatching-to-sample, one with multiple pairs of objects and the other with a single pair, to evaluate their ability to remember objects. They then received either bilateral aspiration lesions of the anterior rhinal cortex or bilateral excitotoxic lesions of the amygdala, or were retained as uno...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Kent State University, 1997. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 91-104).